The Common Law eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 446 pages of information about The Common Law.

The Common Law eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 446 pages of information about The Common Law.

Here the prevailing view of the Roman law comes in to fortify principle with precedent.  We are told that, of the many who might have the actual charge or custody of a thing, the Roman law recognized as possessor only the owner, or one holding as owner and on his way to become one by lapse of time.  In later days it made a few exceptions on practical grounds.  But beyond the pledgee and the sequester (a receiver appointed by the court) these exceptions are unimportant and disputed. 2 Some of the Roman jurists state in terms that depositaries and borrowers have not possession of the things intrusted to them. 3 Whether the German interpretation of the sources goes too far or not, it must be taken account of in the examination of German theories.

[210] Philosophy by denying possession to bailees in general cunningly adjusted itself to the Roman law, and thus put itself in a position to claim the authority of that law for the theory of which the mode of dealing with bailees was merely a corollary.  Hence I say that it is important to show that a far more developed, more rational, and mightier body of law than the Roman, gives no sanction to either premise or conclusion as held by Kant and his successors.

In the first place, the English law has always had the good sense 1 to allow title to be set up in defence to a possessory action.  In the assize of novel disseisin, which which was a true possessory action, the defendant could always rely on his title. 2 Even when possession is taken or kept in a way which is punished by the criminal law, as in case of forcible entry and detainer, proof of title allows the defendant to retain it, and in many cases has been held an answer to an action of trespass.  So in trespass for taking goods the defendant may set up title in himself.  There might seem to be a trace of the distinction in the general rule, that the title cannot be tried in trespass quare clausum.  But this is an exception commonly put on the ground that the judgment cannot change the property, as trespass for chattels or trover can. 3 The rule that you cannot go into title in a possessory action presupposes great difficulty in the proof, the probatio diabolica of the Canon law, delays in the process, and importance of possession [211] ad interim,—­all of which mark a stage of society which has long been passed.  In ninety-nine cases out of a hundred, it is about as easy and cheap to prove at least a prima facie title as it is to prove possession.

In the next place, and this was the importance of the last Lecture to this subject, the common law has always given the possessory remedies to all bailees without exception.  The right to these remedies extends not only to pledgees, lessees, and those having a lien, who exclude their bailor, but to simple bailees, as they have been called, who have no interest in the chattels, no right of detention as against the owner, and neither give nor receive a reward. 1

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The Common Law from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.